Introduction To Reliability
Introduction To Reliability
CHAPTER – 1
INTRODUCTION TO
RELIABILITY
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CHAPTER-1
INTRODUCTION
1.1 Introduction:
the “Reliability Engineering” has taken birth during World War II with a
shape by blending itself in all phases of the product life cycle from
proposal to manufacturing.
a reliability engineer.
service; this is indicated by the word “Reliability”. One can find many
reliability is quality over time, which is under the influence of time and
high quality systems with less quality components. Adding one or more
explained with reliability of a motor car. If any car fails, even after
considered as reliable.
be reliable because no two are ever absolutely identical, even though they
are of the same make. There are always small manufacturing differences
and a few may contain defects. The car designers try to make the car
reduce variations and eliminate defects. If both the designer and the
quality engineer had been completely successful and every car had been
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used identically, then every car would have the same reliability. In
be trouble free, if used and maintained correctly and one fails to work as
intended, then it can be said that the reliability of each car is 99 percent,
given below.
R(t) =
affected or totally stopped. The concept of failures and their details help
when the item or component is installed, the item fails with high
stages and gradually decreases and stabilize over a longer period of time.
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an item for a longer period. These types of failures are known as random
time. Due to wear and tear with the usage, the item gradually
failures are called as wear-out failures. At this stage failure rate seems to
improvement is very high and the approach becomes unwieldy with large
design stage itself. The various means of increasing the system reliability
methods namely
Element redundancy
Unit redundancy
Let C1 and C2 be the two elements with reliabilities R1(t) and R2(t)
C1 Effect
Cause
C2
in Figure 1.3
C1 C2
Cause Effect
C1 C2
Active redundancy
Stand by redundancy
only when need arises. The schematic diagram representing the active
Cause C1 Effect
C2
Cause C1 Effect
C2
almost all the cases. The advantages of the redundancy approach are:
flexibility.
x
reliability parameters of the system. The system may vary from simple
and elements.
system.
system reliability like using large safety factors, reducing the complexity
of the system, increasing the reliability of the components etc. There are
1. Series configuration
2. Parallel configuration
3. Mixed configuration
4. Series-parallel configuration
5. Parallel-series configuration
6. k-out-of-m- configuration
8. Complex configuration
9. Coherent system
components are considered critical in that sense that their function must
this concept if any one component connected serially fails, the System
will fail. The reliability block diagram as shown in Figure 1.4 represents
IN 1 2 3 n OUT
The entire system will fail even if one of its components fails.
component reliabilities.
(1)
where
system. The elements for such a system are also said to be connected in
2 OUT
IN
The entire system will fail only when all the units in the system
fails.
(2)
(3)
(4)
found and then the system reliability may be obtained on the basis of the
1 2
IN
OUT
4
3
(5)
ith stage.
1 2
1
IN
2 3 OUT
nk
n1 4
n2
FigureFIG
1.71.5
Series - Parallel Configuration
(6)
path
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C1 C2 Cn
IN C1 C2 Cn OUT
C1 C2 Cn
components.
given by
P ( m, x ) = B ( m , x ) . Px . ( 1 – p ) m – x (7)
(8)
configuration is expressed as
(9)
S1 S2
S5
S3 S4
system.
Figure.1.10.
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A B
D C
sub systems) function if and only if each stage function. Even with this
fixed constraint values may not be available for cost, weight, and volume
attained. For clarity and ease of reference, the following models can be
exists as
j = 1, 2…r (10)
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where each Cij > 0, r is the maximum number of units in parallel. Select
(11)
j = 1, 2…r
result. Only the spares originally provided may be used for replacements,
dominated allocations.
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The series parallel systems are considered with cost, weight and
condition.
Maximize (12)
(13)
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(14)
(15)
cost function from actual cost data. This can be done taking the past
available. For this reason, a general behavior model of the cost versus the
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model that is precisely applicable to every situation. How ever, one of the
situation can be adopted. The four cost models used in the present work
Function 1:
where cj, bj and 1/dj > 0 and cj is cost co-efficient,, bj, are constants.
Function 2:
Function 3:
Function 4:
compared.
presented.